Abstract

This paper examines the mechanics of ball shear testing with the objective of understanding the mechanism by which the maximum shear force and the rate of crack growth is dependent on the solder bump size. For this, Pb-Sn solder bumps with diameters between 460 lm and 760 lm are soldered to 400 lm-diameter Cu pads and subjected to ball shear testing. In spite of the constant interface area, the bump size significantly impacts the measured shear fracture force and the crack growth rate. Both the fracture force and the crack growth rate increase with bump size, and in the case of the fracture force, the increase is almost linear. Our analysis finds that the linear increase in the fracture force is a result of the bump deformation force, which increases with bump size. A simple model that accounts for the deformation force component is developed and used to extract the true interface fracture force. The estimated true interface fracture force is found to vary little with bump size, tightly converging to the 40 MPa to 48 MPa range. On the other hand, the dependence of crack growth rate on bump size is found to result from the higher degree of rotational moment associated with larger bumps.

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